On 14 Jun 2005, at 4:50 PM, Martin Costabel wrote:
Matthew Sachs wrote:
[]
I looked through Radar, and it turns out that this is a problem
which we fixed in Xcode 2.1. The cause was that between Panther
and Tiger, c++filt moved from Xcode into BSD.pkg, so it was doing
some funny things on upgrade installs of Xcode 2.0.
Upgrade installs of Xcode 2.0 is something that should have been
strongly discouraged (or maybe it is and nobody pays attention?)
There were and are people (one again today) who cannot compile
packages because the have some old headers like ansi.h in /usr/
include. When they count files in /usr/include, they typically find
25% extra files - something like 3300 instead of 2700.
So what's the best thing to do if
a) I installed Tiger via update, including an update install of XCode
2.0
and
b) My system seems to be working, although I have no /usr/bin/c++filt
?
Should I wait for something to break and then worry about trying to
do an uninstall of XCode followed by a clean install? Or should I be
more adventurous and upgrade to 2.1 with the hope that, by the time I
need to compile something that doesn't currently work with 2.1, it
will be OK?
Thoughts appreciated.
Kevin Broderick / [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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